Art is vital
for me. It is almost a religion. It means to
believe in people, in life, in
love. It is a response to what is beautiful and
ugly. As an artist I do what I
do for no other purpose than to express my
feelings.
--
Tuan
By its very nature, "sculpture"
often suggests "mass"… if only in the weight of
its material - be it bronze,
marble or stone. To experience the bronze
figurative sculpture of Vietnamese
artist, Tuan, however, is to experience the
defiance of the nature of bronze
sculpture. Tuan glorifies the beauty of the human
form with masterful precision.
However, the true uniqueness of his style is not
in the physical expression of
human beauty, but in his ability to infuse
physical "mass" with an almost divine
sense of weightlessness.
Tuan’s artwork radiates
peacefulness and serenity through graceful lines
and rhythmic compositions so
that while glorifying the human body, he at the
same time glorifies the human
spirit, exalting the exhilarating experience of
life. Tuan infuses his sculpture
with a celestial beauty that carries his human
forms beyond earthly existence
and into the realm of the heavenly in a quiet
celebration of life. Though cast
in bronze, his forms appear to be magically
suspended like angels on the
wing.
"Equilibrium", the first of
Tuan’s sculptures to be released in limited
edition through Masterpiece
Publishing, Inc. of Laguna Beach, is the ideal
example of Tuan’s talent for
combining form with divine sensuality. His image
of man and woman reflects the
beauty of love and life and form in a composition
that defies gravity while
elevating humanity to angelic heights.
The serenity and celebration
reflected in his work comes in striking
contradiction to Tuan’s own past. Born
in Vietnam in 1963, Tuan experienced the fall of
Saigon in 1975, survived a
failed escape attempt from his native land in
1988, witnessed the death of his
closed friend in the same escape attempt, and was
then cast into a concentration
camp. Almost miraculously, he escaped the camp
and fled to the United States
where he became captivated with sculpting. In
1995, Tuan received his fine art
degree from the Art Institute of Southern
California in Laguna Beach, CA.
Tuan has received the Gloria
Medal from the National Sculpture Society (New
York), a medal designed by C.
Paul Jennewein and bestowed upon a young artist
in Jennewein’s memory for a
meritorious body of work as determined by the
luminary board of the Society. He
has been exhibited throughout Southern California
and has been commissioned for
a number of public and private works, including a
memorial bust for the Nicole
Brown Simpson Charitable Foundation in 1997.